TO BAKE. LET’S GET THE FEEDING OUT OF THE WAY, AND THEN WE’RE GOING TO TALK ABOUT BAKER’S PERCENTAGES UNCLE PASTRY CHEF MITCHELL MORE SAYS NECESSITY IS WHAT LED HIM TO DOING FACEBOOK LIVE COOKING LESSONS FOR FAMILIES. MOORE SAYS HE HA ANOTHER WAY TO HE FEEDING YOUR FAMILY SOMETHING THAT YOU LITERALLY MADE MORE SAYS HE’S ENJOYED SEEING PEOPLE BAKE WITH THEIR FAMILIES AND EVEN INCORPORATE HIS VIDEOS INTO DAILY HOME SCHOOL LESSONS. HE HOPES THAT EVEN WHEN LIFE RETURNS TO NORMAL FAMILIES CONTINUE TO SPEND IN THE KITCHEN. THE PEOPLE CAN FIGURE IT OUT AND KEEP DOING IT GOING TO SQ

As COVID-19 forces people to stay home, many are baking to fill the time and to feed their families.Pastry chef Mitchell Moore is using social media to teach families to bake bread. Moore, owner of Campbell’s Bakery and Campbell’s Craft Donuts, said necessity led him to conduct the Facebook Live cooking lessons.“I was seeing people do something because they need it, which was bake bread, because you just can’t find it (at the store),” Moore said. Moore said people had called him asking to buy yeast to make bread. He decided there was another way to help.“You don’t have to have yeast to make bread. You have wild yeast to make sourdough, and they asked, ‘Well, how do you do that?’” Moore said.The chef pushed the live button on Facebook and dozens tuned in to learn.“There’s something special about feeding your family something you literally made,” Moore said. Moore said he has enjoyed seeing people bake with their families and even incorporate his videos into daily home school lessons. He hopes that when life returns to normal, families will continue to spend time together in the kitchen.“There are studies that show that a dinner time, a set dinner time, can influence people even into their adulthood, so yeah, I hope people continue,” Moore said.The bread tutorials are posted on the Campbell’s Bakery Facebook page.

As COVID-19 forces people to stay home, many are baking to fill the time and to feed their families.

Pastry chef Mitchell Moore is using social media to teach families to bake bread. Moore, owner of Campbell’s Bakery and Campbell’s Craft Donuts, said necessity led him to conduct the Facebook Live cooking lessons.

“I was seeing people do something because they need it, which was bake bread, because you just can’t find it (at the store),” Moore said.

Moore said he has enjoyed seeing people bake with their families and even incorporate his videos into daily home school lessons. He hopes that when life returns to normal, families will continue to spend time together in the kitchen.

“There are studies that show that a dinner time, a set dinner time, can influence people even into their adulthood, so yeah, I hope people continue,” Moore said.